Synopses & Reviews
This is a lively and readable guide to Alexander Pushkin's novel in verse Eugene Onegin, a landmark of European Romanticism, and arguably the best of all Russian poetry. Professor Briggs addresses the question of how such remarkable poetry can have been composed about a rather banal plot, and considers the form of the work and its poetic techniques in detail. He offers fresh interpretations of the characters and events of the poem, and sets it against its European background. He discusses its influence - notably Tchaikovsky's operatic version - and points to its life-affirming philosophy and spirit of joyfulness. The book includes a chronological chart and a guide to further reading.
Synopsis
This is a lively guide to Alexander Pushkin's novel in verse Eugene Onegin, a landmark of European romanticism. Professor Briggs stresses the remarkable qualities of the poetry, and considers the form of the work and its poetic techniques in detail.
Synopsis
A lively guide to Alexander Pushkin's novel in verse Eugene Onegin, a landmark of European romanticism.
Table of Contents
1. The Poetry of Eugene Onegin; 2. Shades of unreality; 3. The unreal reputations of Eugene Onegin and Tatyana Larina; 4. Olga Lensky and the duel; 5. It is in verse, but is it a novel?